: Threads on r/seduction and r/DataHoarder frequently feature users sharing links to MEGA folders, Google Drives, or torrent trackers containing archived videos.

For over a decade, Real Social Dynamics (RSD) dominated the online self-improvement, dating, and pickup artistry (PUA) landscape. At the center of the company was Owen Cook, known globally by his moniker .

The is a highly sought-after digital archive containing over a decade of dating, self-actualization, and social dynamics footage that was scrubbed from the internet. Owen Cook , formerly known as RSD Tyler , co-founded Real Social Dynamics (RSD), which grew into the world's largest pickup artist (PUA) training company. Between 2018 and 2020, as the company pivoted away from pickup culture toward mainstream self-help and corporate networking, thousands of hours of highly influential—and highly controversial—YouTube videos were permanently deleted. This triggered a massive preservation effort across the data-hoarding and self-improvement communities to assemble a "repack" of his classic videos. The Evolution and Eras of RSD Tyler’s Content

Many deleted videos were 1 to 3 hours long, featuring granular breakdowns of social interactions that are rare in today's short-form TikTok/Reels landscape.

: The term "repack" could imply that RSD Tyler has taken some of his previously deleted videos or content and is re-releasing it in a new format or under different circumstances. This could be part of a strategy to re-engage his audience with valuable content that was previously available but is now presented in a fresh way.

You might think this is dead content. You’d be wrong. Here is why the repack is seeing a second life.

Do not download the repack to learn "secret routines." That magic is gone. The material is dated (approaches that worked in 2014 get you ignored in 2026).

The most complete repacks—often sizing between 50GB to over 500GB of video data—are typically hosted via peer-to-peer torrent networks. Threads on platforms like Reddit (specifically subreddits dedicated to data hoarding, old school RSD, or self-improvement archives) occasionally share magnet links to these massive compilations. 2. Archive.org (The Internet Archive)

For those determined to find the "repack," the search is not straightforward. Here are the most effective strategies currently used by the community.